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Romanian band Vama plays Roma repatriation-inspired song 'Sarkozy versus Gypsy'
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The song, a satire which underlines the ridicule of the European attitude towards the gipsy issue, does not aim to take sides, but rather to point out the ...

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Učestvuju takođe orkestri Mato Uralo, Gipsy Punk, Duo Orfej, trio Giass band... Jedno veče Festivala biće posvećeno muzici Šabana Bajramovića. ...

Written by Claude Cahn. Pale MendeDe Cind

Nicolae Guta: Part I | Nicolae Guta: Part II

Nicolae GutaThird Saturday of October, 1999: A thin, poor and obviously Romani man is peddling wares on a ragged blanket at the annual market at Negrin/Fekete tó, just outside Cluj Napoca, the capital of Transylvania. The Negrin market is held in an open expanse of field just off a small railroad stop. The Hungarian name for the village – Fekete tó – adds mystery to the place; the Romanian name means “Black”, while the Hungarian name means “Black Lake”. There is no lake anywhere nearby. Clear, blue sky; cold, bright autumn sun. A cloud of smoke from roasting meat drifts past. Behind the man are two tattered columns of audio speakers, blasting music at such high volume that it is impossible to get close enough to see what he is selling. The music is so distorted that it is barely recognizable as music, more pulsing fuzz than anything else; unbearably, shockingly, painfully loud. The man rocks back and forth, as if in a trance. Guța Volume 7.

The early Guța cassettes (they were all originally audio cassettes, when first issued, generally sold at the tables at market stalls specializing in “Gypsy”), were all numbered “volumes”. For want of a better description, we are going to call the period which extends from the beginning to the numbered cassettes through cassette Volume 6, “the early period”, and the period from Volume 7 until his adoption of the Bucharest pop manele style “the classic period”, following which he becomes essentially just another Romanian pop star, and this essay at least somewhat loses interest in him.

The first cassette of the early period, appearing in 1994, was “Volume 1”, the second “Volume 2”, etc. As of December 2008, there were 28 “Volumes” of Guța, not including a number of “Best of” cassettes, a separate series called “Boss of the Bosses” – also numbered (including “Boss of Bosses, 007”), many recordings with other Romanian popular musicians, a raft of bootleg as well as official wedding video recordings, as well as other recordings.

It is possible to divide the early numbered “Volume” cassettes approximately as follows: the first six are Timişoara-based recordings in the Banat sound, with a young Guța not yet prepared to test his voice to the extent he would in subsequent efforts. The early cassettes are primarily covers of songs already in frequent use at Romani parties and weddings, with only limited material written by Guța himself. Early on, particularly on the first several recordings, there is nothing particularly to distinguish Guța from other wedding and party singers in southwestern Transylvania and Banat. However, Guța Number 6 includes begins to explore unusual territory.

Side one or two of the standard Guța cassette of both the early period and the classic period generally begins with an instrumental, usually lightening fast and somewhat cartoonish, over which the credits are read: “Esteemed Listener,” this begins, before a list including studio, sponsor (“spon-zor”, accent on the second syllable), and others are listed. Often, the band is also introduced now. The band line-up on Guța Volume 1 was: Tudor Iovanovici (electronic organ), Remus Carpaci (saxofon), Marius Gheorghe (accordion) and Traian Constantin (guitar). At the height of the classic period, the core of Guța’s band was: Dorin Novacovic on synthesizer (the instrument the main purpose of which is to provide both the bass guitar line and the drum machine); Balan Petrovic on guitar; Anton Trifoi on violin; and Remus Carpaci on clarinet, saxophone and tarogot (a somewhat cruder Balkan clarinet).

Thereafter follow the songs. The cassette will include around 12-14 songs. Of these, all but one or two are in Romanian. The others – in Romani – may be standard Romani classics or more obscure older songs, or they may be new songs. Around four of the songs are doinas – “table songs” – siniake gilja in Romani. Of these, one or two will be the genuinely long, note-wrenching siniake, generally beginning with a plaintive organ tone, accompanied primarily by the half-sung, half-keened tones of the table ballad, with all of their extended trills and ornaments. Guța Volume 8 from the classic period is all table songs, as are several subsequent collections. Table songs are the black licorice of Romani music. They are ultimately the heart of the matter. The master will be judged by his table songs. The other two siniake will be slightly more rhythmic, generally accompanied by guitar, but similarly offering a narrative of dreams and ideals shattered, euphoria rendered sober. These songs are often referred to as “ascultare” – “listening songs”.

The rest of the songs on early and classic period cassettes are “jocuri” – dances — Romanian-language pop songs in the Banat style. These can be “ardeleana” – dances in the Transylvanian style – a fast and tight dance in 2/4 time. Or they can be the somewhat more expansive and ornamented dances in the Banat/Timiş County style, which shares a number of features with Serbian dance music, Serbia being just over the border and partially sharing the historical region of Banat.

On the cassette covers, an impish sense of humor: Guța wielding a samurai sword; Guța warming his hands over huge bags of money; Guța stuffing the enemy into the trunk of a car; Guța as Viggo Mortensen in Lord of the Rings, wielding the Sword of Aragorn just ahead of a concerned Legolas the elf warrior, longbow drawn. Some of these tropes are, however, well, double-edged. For example, the samurai sword has in recent years become a preferred weapon of inter-familial Romani warfare, a detail the Romanian yellow press rarely neglects to mention when reporting on violence between Romani clans.

Guța Volume 7, “Stuff the Enemies in the Trunk of the Car” (1999) constitutes the start of a fundamental shift in sound, both in terms of arrangements, as well as in recording style. The evolution is somewhat comparable to the change in Bob Marley and the Wailers’ evolution after they joined Island records and were re-tailored for Western rock audiences; from a provincial, particular style, a new sound is built, based both on advances in recording technology, as well as a willingness to adjust existing modes for a wider audience. From Volume 7, Guța relies less on a constricted 2/4 time and instead allows for a more expansive 4/4, as well as other signatures; the rhythm guitar of Balan Petrovic takes on increasing complexity, at times becoming among the most sophisticated rhythm guitar work available anywhere; the guitar and other instruments – particularly the bass tones — are assisted by heightened recording quality; and Guța and team acquire a taste for increasing amounts of reverb, echo, and other depth- enhancing sonic steroids; and Guța’s lyrical prowess – including his spontaneous prowess in live, especially wedding contexts – arrives in its element.

It is sometime around Guța Volume 7 that the vocal signatures also appeared. When exactly the phrase “Opa-dee-lay-lay” (and its twin, “Opa-dee-lay-la”) first appeared on the tongue of the master is a mystery, but Guța Volume 7 establishes this piece of gibberish as central theme, and all of the next cassettes explore every possible aspect of its usage. Guța can be recognized by “Opa-dee-lay-lay”. Second in rank, although no less important, are mouth rhythm elements, such as the refrain of “Shukar San, Shukar Kheles”: “Aj-dibideep-pa-pala-la”. But this could be other singers as well. “Opa-dee-lay-lay” is all Guța.

This period is Guța at the height of his creative powers, before his adoption of generalized popular Manele sound. The cassettes of this period include Volume 7 (“Stuff the Enemies in the Trunk of the Car”); Volumes 8 (“If I Did not Have Brothers, My Enemies Would Kill Me”); the two cassettes of Volume 9 (Part 1, “I’d Rather Have an Honorable Bride than a Lot of Money”, and Episode 2, “I’m Giving Some Coins to Everyone”; my translation of the title of Part 1 does no justice to the Romanian-language rhyming couplet, “Să n-am nici una de-o sută, Dar să am nevastă cistită”); Volume 10 (“We Are the Iron Guard”); and Volume 11 (“Guy of All Guys”). This period also includes a collection entirely of table songs, issued just before the appearance of Volume 9, called “I Don’t Know How to Be Better”, and featuring a demonstrably sad Guța on the cover.

TO BE CONTINUED…

Coming next: Part IV – Nicolae Gutsa: May the Enemies Die

New Years Eve, 2006: a portly actor sporting a rat-like Guța moustache appears impersonating the now nationally-prominent Guța among a parade of other mock-public figures on a New Year’s Eve television program. What is Guța hoping for in the coming year, the interviewer asks? A long, stupefied silence. And then the response: “better enemies”. The studio audience roars with laughter. Enemies – Dusmaea or Duşmanii in Romani and Romanian – the root word is the same – feature prominently in the Guța lyrical pantheon. The signature track from Volume 7:

   13. Vaguely suggestive of brutality is Guța’s past in heavy industry in the town of Petroşani, a mining centre. On several occasions after 1989, miners been summoned to Bucharest to violently quell protests by students and intellectuals. Among
many Romani fans, Guța is believed to have actually been a miner. However, his official website (http://personal.nicolaeguta.ro/, accessed 30 January 2009) identifies him as having worked for the railroad.

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Amala Tube

Song Introduction

Cororo
Original author of the song is Dusko Petrovic. Dusko Petrovic wrote, compose and song for the very first time Cororo at 1969. Here is the sample sing by Romanian Roma singer Nicolae Guta
Enjoy!